I'm a Dutch student searching for someone who wants to translate some sentences for me into Papiamento (like it is used on Aruba).
It's for a project on analyzing the Papiamento-language.
I found some translation-sites, but they all seem to work with Papiamentu, used on the other islands. The differences between these different versions of Papiaments are very confusing to me.
Can you help me?
I'll type the sentences I need at the end of this message.

Danki in advance!

Jolanda.

The king found some books.

He did not read any books to his son.

The three soldiers stirred the soup.

They will stirr it for three hours.

Every soldier was old and ugly.

The castle is on a hill near a lake.

Antonio has lived in Venice for three years now.

No one arrived at the castle yesterday.

Most of Prospero's books will arrive next week.

The kind man gave a book to his daughter.

She will put the book on a chair.

Macbeth may find them in the forest (assume that them refers to people).

Ok, I found a translator outside this forum, but I can't reach him anymore because he's on vacation and at some points I had a little trouble deciphering his handwriting.
Can someone please look at what I made from it and correct me where needed?

don't know that many words in the curacao papiamento, they have certain words that we don't use. like the word "dark" arubans say "scur", the people of curacao say "sucu". "sucu" for the arubans means "sugar". aruba say "drei" while curacao say drai.

Some words I looked up in a dictionary, but still that was difficult at times.
After some words in it, there's an (A), (B) or (C), which means that the word is used like that on Aruba, Bonaire or Curacao.
I tried to only use the Aruban words, but according to you I didn't?

at 10. Both amabel and afabel were in my dictionary, but you usually use amabel?

at 12. I can't find the word 'bos' in my dictionary, but I see now why ḅshi is incorrect. It's more like 'hopi'. Now I found the word 'mondi' instead. Could you agree with that too?

at 19. My translator wrote enkontra as well, but in my dictionary I could only find kontra. (My translator told me he didn't get any writing lessons in school for Papiamento, so sometimes I picked the dictionary over what he wrote...)

i agree that mondi can be used here, although mondi we see it as a tropical vegetation (cacti, weed, and some trees like kwihi, divi-divi, etc.) the trees are not that tall or denser than in a forest, curacao have a more denser vegetation and they call it bos which is a dutch word for forest.

yes the "kontra" in aruba means against. it's kind of tricky, the curacao papiamento is influenced by the dutch and the one of aruba is by the spanish. the bonaire is also influenced by the dutch but lesser than the curacaolanians. the bonaire language has this primitive version. for example the word ice, aruba say "ijs" which is the same as in dutch, curacao also, the bonaire say "awa duro"(hard water).